India Indian Military ORBAT and Wargaming

Joe Shearer

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Now if we turn the argument on its head, what do we have?

An infantry body that does have one or more of these - tank destroyer, portable guided missile, attack helicopter, missile-carrying UAV, close air support aircraft - how would it react to an armoured column? Oh, damn, here they come, OK, fellas, let's clean them up.
 

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That leaves us with four possibilities:
  1. We have tanks, we have their antidotes;
  2. We have tanks, little or few antidotes;
  3. We have antidotes and no tanks;
  4. We have no tanks, we have no antidotes.
But this is dead wrong, because our success or failure will be matched by the opposition. In stark terms, we need to ask:
  1. They have tanks, they have their antidotes;
  2. They have tanks, they have little or few antidotes;
  3. They have antidotes, no tanks;
  4. They have no tanks, no antidotes.
I hope the point is coming across; the tank is still a formidable technology unopposed; it is weak and vulnerable seriously opposed.
 

Joe Shearer

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Reality can be modelled; it is just that it is a multi-variate possibility, and it is extremely tedious to pick up all the threads of our multi-variate existence.
 

Nilgiri

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Well, yes, he presents an elegant set of reasons why the tank should not be written off yet.

In very abbreviated form, tanks can be stopped, and they can be stopped in several ways at once - through shaped charges delivered by tank destroyers, through man-portable guided missiles, through air-borne missiles, even through 20th century RPGs, in certain urban warfare cases.

Effectively, the author's argument is - what if an infantry force has neither tank destroyers, nor portable guided missiles, nor attack helicopters or missile-carrying UAVs, nor close air support from fixed wing aircraft and is faced by an oncoming armoured column? Trouble! No ifs, buts, maybes; just trouble.

His argument is more its extremely incompetent (in this era of combined warfare) to send purely tank formations into an enemy formation (of any kind) knowing they have a lot of anti-tank counters....and then declare the "tank is dead" etc.

Just like sending infantry formations (with nothing else among them or support available) into nested machine gun defences and saying infantry is obsolete (say after WW1).

There is plenty of room and scope for tanks (for a long time, as no other platform wields the 120mm gun quite in the way it does), but deploying them with combined arms support (where relevant, which is most cases these days) is crucial.

Basically there is very limited scope these days for purely armoured columns (or purely X anything) in spearheads and maybe even sustainment.

Of course making these combined arms work together effectively is a big deal to keep testing and refining.

The rest of it is optimisation of the technology (and support technology) as the counters also develop and present themselves.
 

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That leaves us with four possibilities:
  1. We have tanks, we have their antidotes;
  2. We have tanks, little or few antidotes;
  3. We have antidotes and no tanks;
  4. We have no tanks, we have no antidotes.
But this is dead wrong, because our success or failure will be matched by the opposition. In stark terms, we need to ask:
  1. They have tanks, they have their antidotes;
  2. They have tanks, they have little or few antidotes;
  3. They have antidotes, no tanks;
  4. They have no tanks, no antidotes.
I hope the point is coming across; the tank is still a formidable technology unopposed; it is weak and vulnerable seriously opposed.

The point is to have it as rarely as possible in a situation where its facing its counters alone. That goes for anything you have though.
 

Joe Shearer

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True, true, true....Pure anything is a prescription for failure. Getting different arms and services to work together is extremely difficult, without years of exercises, and, sadly, a war or two.
 

Joe Shearer

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His argument is more its extremely incompetent (in this era of combined warfare) to send purely tank formations into an enemy formation (of any kind) knowing they have a lot of anti-tank counters....and then declare the "tank is dead" etc.
True, true.

I don't see that as differing in presentation from my own conclusions. Can't send in anything naked

PanzerKiel's objections to using a mass of 900 hovercraft is relevant here. He said, more or less, that putting up such a huge soft target would attract potshots from everybody, and would gain nothing.

While thinking it through, it obviously percolated through that this technology needed to be an integral limb of a composite effort - an, ahem, Atoot Ang! - to be effective.
 

Nilgiri

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Importance of enough dismounted infantry available.


Tank/armoured vehicle ratio being too high in a formation was found out (iirc) as early as tanks themselves arriving on the scene...in WW1.
 

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The images of destroyed tanks in the Ukraine war have rekindled the global debate on the survivability of the tank in the battlefield. In March 2020, Gen Manoj Mukund Naravane, the Chief of Army Staff, said that in the context of the changing character of warfare, the icons of the 20th century such as main battle tanks and fighter aircraft are on their way out and the battle-winning factor in future may not be numerical equivalence but technological superiority.

In December 2020, the wheeled Armoured Fighting Vehicle (AFV) was included in the import embargo list of weapons/platforms. In June 2021, the Army sought a Request for Information (RFI) aimed to procure 1,700 Future Ready Combat Vehicles (FRCVs) and canceled its 2017 Request for Proposal (RFP). In the acquisition process, the RFP follows the completion of the RFI stage. In March 2022, the Narendra Modi government approved the development of light tanks under the Make in India category of the Defence Procurement Procedure (DAP) 2020. It was an initiative for their use on the northern borders.

The flurry and speed of initiatives for the procurement of tanks reflect a reaction to the Chinese threat on the northern borders. But it also points to the follow up of the COAS highlighting the need for diverse capabilities that are crucial to achieving technological superiority.

The bulk of the current inventory of Russian-origin T-72 and T-90 tanks is outdated in technological terms, especially with regard to their mobility, protection, and firepower. Mobility is impacted by their weight category of 46 to 48 tonnes. The enhanced need for protection and firepower is reflected in the requirements laid down for the FRCVs. It is expected that the enhanced functions should be able to get the better of adversary’s tanks, armored vehicles, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), and destroy or deter helicopters.

For sure, both the FRCVs and the light tanks will take time to arrive and the process could, optimistically, take up to the late 2020s. Till then, concerns about technological inferiority will continue in the military confrontation with China. It spans a range of military capabilities relating to warfare on land, air, and sea. India will have to make do with its current inventory of tanks and most other major platforms. The question is — what should be done till then as the threat, especially on the northern borders, will not wait till the fielding of the future tanks or other platforms?







The answer lies in the domain of tactics that can provide a path to compensate for technological inferiority. The soundness of tactics lies in the human agency that can provide the ‘brain power’ and human spirit to overcome technological superiority.

Also read: Should India insist on large warships after sinking of Russia’s Moskva? The lesson not to take


Look north

The need is to fill a time gap of unknown duration through tactics that exploit the vulnerabilities of the tanks and armored vehicles deployed. In Ladakh, the terrain is bereft of cover, and similar is the case in most parts of the north. The greatest vulnerability, especially for China’s frontline mechanised elements, is the combination of the ground and air threats. As a stop-gap, for the defender, the ground threat can be generated by foot mobile fire bases, which leverage terrain and are operated by numerous roving bands in very small infantry-based groups, including special forces.

Wherever possible, small groups of soldiers can also be motorised and this may require the lifting of the import ban on wheeled AFVs due to time constraints, unless indigenous procurement capability delay is acceptable. It will also involve making organisational changes, which is always a major challenge. The change in tactics could offset technological superiority, especially if brainpower, organisational flexibility, and leadership drive operational performance.

Admittedly, such a change in tactics is only an illustration, and surely the ‘brains’ on the ground would conjure better options. On the battlefield, the big is also vulnerable to the small. Notably, human agency and technology can also be on the side of the small.

Not without joint deliberations

But a change in tactics involves the co-option of other branches of the Army as well as the other Services. Strengthening jointness is a necessary condition for changes in tactics. The change has to come about after joint inter-Service and intra-Service deliberations at various levels are carried out. Jointness was one of the main drivers of the reforms that created the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) post and brought about other structural changes, including the Department of Military Affairs and the post of the permanent Chairman Chiefs of Staff Committee. Strengthening jointness was to come through the creation of the Joint/Integrated Commands. The creation of such commands is a significant defence reform.

The untimely demise of Gen Bipin Rawat, India’s first CDS, in mid-December 2021 and the non-appointment of his replacement would surely have slowed down many of the initiatives that were underway. Technological superiority is equipment-based. In equipping, the fundamental issue is that the timeline of procurement decisions maturing to deployed systems is often unpredictable. The current inventory must provide the planning coordinates for field commanders at all levels. They must, in different configurations, put their heads together and look for a change of tactics in identified areas to offset technological superiority.

The debate on the future of the tank that has been provoked by the Ukraine war carries a message for the Indian military. The ultimate battle-winning factor is human agency and not technological superiority. The political leadership must take responsibility for the deferred appointment of the CDS, a major reform that was its own initiative. This is unless they believe that India’s geopolitical situation permits time for defence reform to await the arrival of the requisite personality by way of seniority. If that is the case, the move is inexplicable, for the Modi government is already empowered to set seniority aside. It is a power that was used when appointing Gen Rawat as COAS. Only the future may indicate the costs of delay in the appointment of his successor.

If hearsay has a role, one believes that the wait for the CDS will soon be over. Lost time cannot be recovered, but lost mental ground can be, and ‘putting the heads together’ can help. We urgently need viable solutions to determine the changes, if any, in the execution of our operational plans in times of peace and war. The new CDS has a lot of thinking to do. Let us wish him luck whoever he may be.

Lt Gen (Dr) Prakash Menon (retd) is Director, Strategic Studies Programme, Takshashila Institution; former military adviser, National Security Council Secretariat. He tweets @prakashmenon51. Views are personal.
 

Joe Shearer

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The war game has started. India launched a pre-emptive strike on Pakistan, and suffered heavy casualties.
 

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The Indian side had decided to mount a massive pre-emptive strike on the PAF and its airbases at first light, actually even before first light.

They made three out of the seven air bases attacked unserviceable, by destroying the runways. But the defenders fired a massive number of SAM missiles in defence, HQ -9/P, in all probability, with a capability to intercept both cruise missiles and aircraft.

The result was that 61 attacking aircraft were shot down, and a vast number of cruise missiles, but three of their bases were knocked out, needing urgent repairs to their runways, and 25 aircraft, including a significant number of their front line F 16s, were destroyed on the ground.
 

Nilgiri

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Importance of enough dismounted infantry available.


Tank/armoured vehicle ratio being too high in a formation was found out (iirc) as early as tanks themselves arriving on the scene...in WW1.

A look into the VDV force structure's preset issues.

Similar conclusion on dismounted strength (especially from 12 minute mark) importance.

 

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A look into the VDV force structure's preset issues.

Similar conclusion on dismounted strength (especially from 12 minute mark) importance.

I am wondering where to start.

First, this is the kind of pictorial modelling I had hoped to get from cats. He has his own pressures, and we need to move on.

Second, the modelling of the Indian Army of the Future (IROF?) need not stick to the models of the Indian Army of the present. If we look at the production trends, missiles of all sorts - the Brahmos, MBRL rockets like the Pinaka rockets, simple SAMs such as Akash, all sorts - helicopters, patrol boats and gunboats, corvettes, field guns and howitzers, all these have to be accommodated in the formations of the future. We need to look at heli-borne ability within ordinary infantry formations, not for special formations like the VDV alone. Also at adding artillery and attack helicopter support , ATGM support, SAM support down to the lowest levels possible. Where we look at these at Division or at Brigade level, it is desirable to get these down to Battalion, even company level.

Third, there are different kinds of infantry. We need to look at their roles differently. What the Indian infantry faces in the plains of the Punjab, Haryana, and some of the upper parts of Rajasthan is different from what it has to face in the desert, or the hills and mountains of Kashmir, or the plateaux of Tibet, or the hills and mountains, again, of eastern India, of Sikkim and Arunachal, and of the jungles of the Burma border - every situation is different.

These are three issues that arise.
 

Joe Shearer

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Another thing came jumping out soon enough.

We don't have enough destroyers for three carriers. A carrier battle group typically consists of six destroyers and a larger, Ticonderoga class vessel, call it what you will, the latest fashion is to call it a cruiser. We have a total of ten destroyers, where we need eighteen. We are in no way likely to make eight more destroyers by the time that Vishaal starts going into induction.

A second - we need helicopter carriers, four would be nice, but at least two.

This is not to keep up with the Joneses, but to 'bridge the gap', and there's quite a gap. The distance from the latitude of Dabolim to the correponding coastal mark in Yemen (safety demands a landfall in Oman, but increases the distance) is almost greater than the combat range of the P8I (2,202 kms against 2,222 kms, and that is without the ability to land, to refuel and to take off for the return flight). Only half the distance can be covered. Only ship-borne aircraft can cover the balance 1,100 kms. With one each in the Arabian Sea and in the Bay of Bengal, that is a minimum requirement of two, but with time out for maintenance and refit, it is four.

Oh, they would also do well to have an escort, although strictly speaking, the ship's own helicopters should guard it against submarines and surface vessels alike, and it should not in the normal course of events come anywhere close to a land-based coastal artillery missile.

Third, if the Pakistan Navy is to be stoppered, ever, then a missile is needed that is extremely accurate, is almost not traceable on radar, and can shoot further, from on board ship, than the existing coastal batteries. The Russian Bal (very inexpensive and robust and easy to use) reaches out to 260 kms.; the Brahmos can beat it, and should be deployed against it.
 

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Battle Order put out another high quality ORBAT video, an interesting look at ORBAT dynamics when you move back to divisional force structure basis from brigade level.


@AlphaMike @Paro @UkroTurk et al.
 

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Hi Guys so I have been preparing this battle plan since I do War cabinet/Crisis Model UNs so thought it might find a place here, do comment and let me know of it

All Maps of this operation is here in this link : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Z8IgwEJAtbLil2jQxsXIb84mJyRgWKkm/view?usp=share_link

Type : Military Expedition
By : Abhirav “Rao” Sharma
Operation Pest Control

Preamble : In a limited duration war, counter air and naval operations assume a lower rather facilitatory role in this Operation weight of the Air Force be thrown behind the army to capture and sustain as much territory as possible so as to bargain from a position of power later the interim ideal goal will be all land to the east of Indus river which includes pakistan GHQ at Rawalpindi and Pak Navy HQ at karachi, the capital Islamabad being on low priority as an exception

Compliment : Western Fleet, Carrier strike group from eastern fleet, 28 IAF bomber squadrons (Jaguar fighter bombers and Su-30 MKI in bomber role) and 20 IAF Strike squadrons, 6 Mechanised infantry brigades, 8 Infantry brigades, 5 Light Infantry brigades (Equipped with IFVs and personnel carriers), 7 armoured brigades, G-SAT Missiles, BrahMos cruise missiles, Prithvi/Agni III, Agni II,Pralay ballistic missiles

Operation Pest Control
  1. The Operation shall commence with a power grid outage in pakistan which will be caused by shooting down a satellite in low earth orbit over pakistan which will cause electric fluctuations on ground resulting in loss of power for at least 4 hours all over pakistan including in defence facilities
  2. For convenience pakistan has been divided in to Baloch, Punjab, Swaat and Sindh theatres and Indian forces has been divided into Northern theatre command and Western theatre command as shown in the map
  3. As indicated on map, ballistic/cruise missile targets will now be engaged with ground to ground and air to ground BrahMos cruise missiles with 500 Kg conventional warheads with satellite guidance for accurate strike
  4. The Air Force doctrine shall be rolling order strike and run attack on Pakistani forward air bases in an Israeli style preemptive strike that is in the form of waves of attacks on first runways and then on exposed aircrafts which shall begin with immediate effect once the ballistic missiles have struck.
  5. The first wave of bombers will attack Taihar, Nawabshah, Sukkhar, Rahimyar khan, Vihari, Jacobabad Rajanpur, multan, sharkot, bhagtanwala, lahore, chaklala (Rawalpindi), Pakistan GHQ at Rawalpindi, Risalpur and Gilgit Corp command at the so calledPoK as indicated in the map main priority will be bomb and crater the runway so that fighter could not be scrambled.
  6. Second wave of strike fighters will attack immediately after on the same bases as mentioned in point 5 to take out any further remaining targets, radars and control towers on the bases as mentioned in point 5
  7. A special strike will be called upon badin signalling station via guided BrahMos cruise missiles with 300 Kg High Explosive warheads
  8. Western fleet(herein WF) with carrier strike group of INS Vikrant (2013) and a carrier detachment from Eastern fleet(Herein CSG-EF) headed by carrier INS Vikramaditya.
  9. WF will move 300 nautical miles towards karachi harbour wherein INAS(Indian Navy Air Squadrons) will start periodic raids on harbour targeting oil tanks and other target such as ships or berths they will also carry out a raid on Pasni and Gwadar air bases
  10. CSG-EF will assist an amphibian landing near the naval base of Jiwani (herein Alpha group)
  11. Western fleet will fire barrage at highlighted area in the map with main gun and guided missiles hammering the coast it would also have a secondary task of blockading all cargo bound to pakistan which includes oil supplies
  12. Rawalpindi (Pakistan GHQ) will be struck with 20 Pruthvi tactical ballistic missiles with 100 Kg conventional warheads and 30 Pralay ballistic missiles with 50 Kg convention warheads
  13. Lahore will be struck with 6 Agni Prime ballistic missiles with 1 tonne of convention warheads at Lahore garrison and Bhagtanwala airbase

Army Operations
(Note : All operations have been shown in the map) Link :** Maps **
I) Sindh Theatre
  • The attack will be carried out by (Beta party) as indicated in map
  • Beta party (as shown in map) includes two tank divisions with provision of T-90 Bhisma tanks and an Infantry division of Rajputana rifles mounted on IFVs
  • A platoon of Parachute regiment will be deployed over “Mirpukas” and “Talhar” forward air bases to neutralise resistance
  • Beta Party will have dual objectives of the first being of 1st tank division with support of BSF and Assam Rifles forming the foot component and rear guard to capture Talhar and Mirapukus
  • Beta party 2nd tank division and Infantry division will be to advance westwards towards karachi
  • Beta Party will receive forward close in air support from Army Aviation Apache and from Bhuj Airbase
  • The Gamma Party comprising of two tank divisions (herein 4th and 5th tank division) a Motorised Infantry brigade and a Mechanised Infantry brigade will assemble near Kisangrah and Loungewala
  • Gamma Party is to be trusted with dual objectives of advancing towards Quetta and Multan breaking up after reaching Ranjanpur will be called Gamma-Sher and Gamma-shah respectively
  • Gamma sher will capture Jacobabad airbase and advance towards Quetta corp command entering the baloch theatre
  • While Gamma-Shah will advance towards Multan entering Punjab theatre and later joining with delta party
  • A special detachment of Light Infantry will be trusted for capturing Rahimyar khan Airbase
  • Gamma Party will receive close in air support from Jaisalmer Airbase and Artillary support from medium artillery guns across the border
II) Punjab theatre
  • Delta Party consisting of two Infantry divisions will assist and overrun vihari airbase with a platoon of Para-SF to advance towards Bhawalpur (Pakistan) and secondary objective of advancing towards Multan to assist Gamma party with a tertiary objective to capture Sharkot airbase
  • Delta party will be provided Air support from Jaisalmer and Bikaner Airbases and support of Rocket Artillery(BrahMos Ground to Ground) across the sector
  • Summation Party consisting of two mechanised infantry brigades will have a singular objective to advance towards Mangla garrison and a primary objective of over running Bhagtanwala airbase
  • Summation party will receive air support from Bikaner Airbase and support of Rocket Artillery(BrahMos Ground to Ground) across the sector
  • Reserve corps-Romeo consisting of two infantry divisions and two tank divisions will remain at standby at the punjab border (as shown in the map)
III) Swaat Theatre
  • Reserve corps-Juliet consisting of a brigade of mechanised infantry and 3 Infantry divisions will remain at standby at the so called PoK it will receive artillery endowments in form of one unit of rocket artillery and medium guns
  • Sigma Party consisting of two divisions of mechanised infantry and one division of Light Infantry (Ladakh scouts) will enter the so called gilgit baltistan and advance towards gilgit garrison and muzaffarabad(so called PoK) it will receive artillery support from rocket artillery (Ground to Ground BrahMos) and Pralay/Pruthvi tactical ballistic missiles
  • Sigma party will receive air support from Srinagar and Pathankot Air Bases
  • Sigma Party will be reinforced with a division of Light Infantry (Sikh light Infantry) to carry out raids on Risalpur airbase
IV ) PLAN “X” - Baloch Theatre - Operation Widow’s Revenge (High risk/Over-Ambitious)

{Note : This Special Operation requires friendly irregulars on ground in form of Balochistan Liberation Army(herein BLA) to support the Expedition prior arrangements to arm and supply BLA should be undertaken}

  • CSG-ES will deploy and assist an amphibian landing of “Sikandar” Expeditionary corps(herein corps) consisting of 3 Light Infantry Brigades (Sikh LI and Maratha LI )and a Light tank division(auxiliary support from corps of engineers )
  • Corp will move and establish a joint garrison in Panjgur with BLA this shall act as a launch pad for advance towards Quetta Corp Command or Karachi (Shara-e-faisal) {Will be notified}
  • Corp will live off the land (this is why Light Infantry is chosen) and will raid Pasni, Orhara and Gwadar while a detachment will occupy Jiwani as a beach head


[Note :Operations in Sindh and Baloch Theatre are trusted with Western Theatre command and Operations in Punjab and Swaat Theatre is trusted with Northern Theatre command]
 

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Nilgiri

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Hi Guys so I have been preparing this battle plan since I do War cabinet/Crisis Model UNs so thought it might find a place here, do comment and let me know of it

All Maps of this operation is here in this link : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Z8IgwEJAtbLil2jQxsXIb84mJyRgWKkm/view?usp=share_link

Type : Military Expedition
By : Abhirav “Rao” Sharma
Operation Pest Control

Preamble : In a limited duration war, counter air and naval operations assume a lower rather facilitatory role in this Operation weight of the Air Force be thrown behind the army to capture and sustain as much territory as possible so as to bargain from a position of power later the interim ideal goal will be all land to the east of Indus river which includes pakistan GHQ at Rawalpindi and Pak Navy HQ at karachi, the capital Islamabad being on low priority as an exception

Compliment : Western Fleet, Carrier strike group from eastern fleet, 28 IAF bomber squadrons (Jaguar fighter bombers and Su-30 MKI in bomber role) and 20 IAF Strike squadrons, 6 Mechanised infantry brigades, 8 Infantry brigades, 5 Light Infantry brigades (Equipped with IFVs and personnel carriers), 7 armoured brigades, G-SAT Missiles, BrahMos cruise missiles, Prithvi/Agni III, Agni II,Pralay ballistic missiles

Operation Pest Control
  1. The Operation shall commence with a power grid outage in pakistan which will be caused by shooting down a satellite in low earth orbit over pakistan which will cause electric fluctuations on ground resulting in loss of power for at least 4 hours all over pakistan including in defence facilities
  2. For convenience pakistan has been divided in to Baloch, Punjab, Swaat and Sindh theatres and Indian forces has been divided into Northern theatre command and Western theatre command as shown in the map
  3. As indicated on map, ballistic/cruise missile targets will now be engaged with ground to ground and air to ground BrahMos cruise missiles with 500 Kg conventional warheads with satellite guidance for accurate strike
  4. The Air Force doctrine shall be rolling order strike and run attack on Pakistani forward air bases in an Israeli style preemptive strike that is in the form of waves of attacks on first runways and then on exposed aircrafts which shall begin with immediate effect once the ballistic missiles have struck.
  5. The first wave of bombers will attack Taihar, Nawabshah, Sukkhar, Rahimyar khan, Vihari, Jacobabad Rajanpur, multan, sharkot, bhagtanwala, lahore, chaklala (Rawalpindi), Pakistan GHQ at Rawalpindi, Risalpur and Gilgit Corp command at the so calledPoK as indicated in the map main priority will be bomb and crater the runway so that fighter could not be scrambled.
  6. Second wave of strike fighters will attack immediately after on the same bases as mentioned in point 5 to take out any further remaining targets, radars and control towers on the bases as mentioned in point 5
  7. A special strike will be called upon badin signalling station via guided BrahMos cruise missiles with 300 Kg High Explosive warheads
  8. Western fleet(herein WF) with carrier strike group of INS Vikrant (2013) and a carrier detachment from Eastern fleet(Herein CSG-EF) headed by carrier INS Vikramaditya.
  9. WF will move 300 nautical miles towards karachi harbour wherein INAS(Indian Navy Air Squadrons) will start periodic raids on harbour targeting oil tanks and other target such as ships or berths they will also carry out a raid on Pasni and Gwadar air bases
  10. CSG-EF will assist an amphibian landing near the naval base of Jiwani (herein Alpha group)
  11. Western fleet will fire barrage at highlighted area in the map with main gun and guided missiles hammering the coast it would also have a secondary task of blockading all cargo bound to pakistan which includes oil supplies
  12. Rawalpindi (Pakistan GHQ) will be struck with 20 Pruthvi tactical ballistic missiles with 100 Kg conventional warheads and 30 Pralay ballistic missiles with 50 Kg convention warheads
  13. Lahore will be struck with 6 Agni Prime ballistic missiles with 1 tonne of convention warheads at Lahore garrison and Bhagtanwala airbase

Army Operations
(Note : All operations have been shown in the map) Link :** Maps **
I) Sindh Theatre
  • The attack will be carried out by (Beta party) as indicated in map
  • Beta party (as shown in map) includes two tank divisions with provision of T-90 Bhisma tanks and an Infantry division of Rajputana rifles mounted on IFVs
  • A platoon of Parachute regiment will be deployed over “Mirpukas” and “Talhar” forward air bases to neutralise resistance
  • Beta Party will have dual objectives of the first being of 1st tank division with support of BSF and Assam Rifles forming the foot component and rear guard to capture Talhar and Mirapukus
  • Beta party 2nd tank division and Infantry division will be to advance westwards towards karachi
  • Beta Party will receive forward close in air support from Army Aviation Apache and from Bhuj Airbase
  • The Gamma Party comprising of two tank divisions (herein 4th and 5th tank division) a Motorised Infantry brigade and a Mechanised Infantry brigade will assemble near Kisangrah and Loungewala
  • Gamma Party is to be trusted with dual objectives of advancing towards Quetta and Multan breaking up after reaching Ranjanpur will be called Gamma-Sher and Gamma-shah respectively
  • Gamma sher will capture Jacobabad airbase and advance towards Quetta corp command entering the baloch theatre
  • While Gamma-Shah will advance towards Multan entering Punjab theatre and later joining with delta party
  • A special detachment of Light Infantry will be trusted for capturing Rahimyar khan Airbase
  • Gamma Party will receive close in air support from Jaisalmer Airbase and Artillary support from medium artillery guns across the border
II) Punjab theatre
  • Delta Party consisting of two Infantry divisions will assist and overrun vihari airbase with a platoon of Para-SF to advance towards Bhawalpur (Pakistan) and secondary objective of advancing towards Multan to assist Gamma party with a tertiary objective to capture Sharkot airbase
  • Delta party will be provided Air support from Jaisalmer and Bikaner Airbases and support of Rocket Artillery(BrahMos Ground to Ground) across the sector
  • Summation Party consisting of two mechanised infantry brigades will have a singular objective to advance towards Mangla garrison and a primary objective of over running Bhagtanwala airbase
  • Summation party will receive air support from Bikaner Airbase and support of Rocket Artillery(BrahMos Ground to Ground) across the sector
  • Reserve corps-Romeo consisting of two infantry divisions and two tank divisions will remain at standby at the punjab border (as shown in the map)
III) Swaat Theatre
  • Reserve corps-Juliet consisting of a brigade of mechanised infantry and 3 Infantry divisions will remain at standby at the so called PoK it will receive artillery endowments in form of one unit of rocket artillery and medium guns
  • Sigma Party consisting of two divisions of mechanised infantry and one division of Light Infantry (Ladakh scouts) will enter the so called gilgit baltistan and advance towards gilgit garrison and muzaffarabad(so called PoK) it will receive artillery support from rocket artillery (Ground to Ground BrahMos) and Pralay/Pruthvi tactical ballistic missiles
  • Sigma party will receive air support from Srinagar and Pathankot Air Bases
  • Sigma Party will be reinforced with a division of Light Infantry (Sikh light Infantry) to carry out raids on Risalpur airbase
IV ) PLAN “X” - Baloch Theatre - Operation Widow’s Revenge (High risk/Over-Ambitious)

{Note : This Special Operation requires friendly irregulars on ground in form of Balochistan Liberation Army(herein BLA) to support the Expedition prior arrangements to arm and supply BLA should be undertaken}

  • CSG-ES will deploy and assist an amphibian landing of “Sikandar” Expeditionary corps(herein corps) consisting of 3 Light Infantry Brigades (Sikh LI and Maratha LI )and a Light tank division(auxiliary support from corps of engineers )
  • Corp will move and establish a joint garrison in Panjgur with BLA this shall act as a launch pad for advance towards Quetta Corp Command or Karachi (Shara-e-faisal) {Will be notified}
  • Corp will live off the land (this is why Light Infantry is chosen) and will raid Pasni, Orhara and Gwadar while a detachment will occupy Jiwani as a beach head


[Note :Operations in Sindh and Baloch Theatre are trusted with Western Theatre command and Operations in Punjab and Swaat Theatre is trusted with Northern Theatre command]

Hi and welcome to the forum.

I'm a little short on time currently, and will have to read all of this a bit later to discuss it with you.

Thanks for joining!
 

Nilgiri

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Apologies, @hellfire2006.

Are you the old @hellfire in a new avatar, or someone completely different?

I believe hellfire2006 (the new one) is the fella that worked with us a bit during the wargaming project.

The old hellfire (the army veteran) is different person. Haven't seen him online much, but I havent been checking in much in various spots lately either.
 

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